The real drama, however, happened on the podium. Alonso celebrated his 100th podium, only to have it stripped away by a post-race penalty for an incorrectly served pit stop—then sensationally reinstated hours later after Aston Martin proved that a jack touching a car doesn't constitute "working" on it.
As the desert night finally cooled, the paddock left Jeddah with a clear message: Red Bull was untouchable, but the internal friction between its two alphas was just beginning to catch fire. Formula.1.GP.Arabia.Saudita.2023.Carrera.DAZNF1...
The floodlights of the Jeddah Corniche Circuit cut through the humid Red Sea air like white sabres, turning the asphalt into a shimmering ribbon of high-speed intent. This wasn't just another race; it was a 330 km/h chess match played on the edge of a razor. The real drama, however, happened on the podium
As the lights went out, the roar of twenty hybrid V6 engines vibrated through the grandstands. Fernando Alonso, the eternal predator in the Aston Martin, surged into the lead at Turn 1. For a brief moment, the "El Plan" believers dared to dream. But the stewards were watching; a misaligned starting position slapped the Spaniard with a five-second penalty, a dark cloud over his podium hopes. The floodlights of the Jeddah Corniche Circuit cut
The restart was a sprint to the finish. Perez and Verstappen traded fastest laps in a silent, high-stakes internal war. Max radioed in, worried about his driveshaft again—the ghost of qualifying haunting his cockpit. "The noise is back, guys." The garage held its breath.
Max Verstappen, the reigning king, had been humbled by a driveshaft failure in qualifying, forcing him to start a lowly 15th. Ahead of him, his teammate Sergio "Checo" Perez sat on pole, looking to prove he wasn't just a wingman, but a title contender. Between them lay the tightest, fastest street circuit on the calendar—a concrete canyon where one centimetre of error meant a carbon-fibre catastrophe.